Chapter 3 - Input and Output
Chapter 3 - Input and Output
Chapter 3 - Input and Output
© 2017 by McGraw-Hill Education. This proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner. This document may not be copied, scanned, duplicated, forwarded, distributed,
or posted on a website, in whole or part.
Learning Outcomes
1. Define input.
2. Describe keyboard entry including types and features of keyboards.
3. Identify different pointing devices including game controllers and styluses.
4. Describe scanning devices including optical scanners, RFID readers , NFC readers
and recognition devices.
5. Recognize image capturing devices , audio-input devices and biometric devices .
6. Define output.
7. Identify different monitor features and types including flat-panels and e-books.
8. Define printing features and types including inkjet and cloud printers.
9. Recognize different audio and video devices including portable media devices.
10. Define combination input and output devices including multifunctional
2
devices,
smart watch, telephones, drones, robots, and VR headgear and gloves.
Introduction
Keyboard
s Mice Pointing
Image Audio-
Scanning
capturing input
Keyboard Entry
Keyboards
Traditional keyboards
Laptop keyboards
Virtual keyboards
Thumb keyboards
Pointing Devices
Touch Game
Mouse screen Stylus
controller
7
Mouse Types
Optical mouse
Has no moving parts
Emits and senses light to detect mouse movement
Can be used on any surface
Wireless mouse
Battery operated
Uses radio waves or infrared light waves
Touch pads
Controls pointer by moving and tapping your fingers on the surface of the pad
Touch Screen
Credit cards
Entertainment cards
Bank cards
Gauging
Managing temperature and Checking out
inventory pressure of tires library books
on a vehicle
Tracking payment
Providing access
Managing as vehicles pass
to rooms or
purchases through booths on
buildings
tollway systems
Character and Mark Recognition Readers
17
NFC tags
18
Image Capturing Devices
21
Source : Slide DC16_Ch05
Unauthorized Access and Use
Face
Fingerprint
recognition
reader
system
Hand Voice
geometry verification
system system
Signature Iris
verification recognition
system system Source : Slide DC16_Ch05
Pages 224 – 226 © 2016 Cengage Learning®. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly
accessible website, in whole or in part.
22
Figures 5-8 – 5-11
OUTPUT DEVICES
Output
Resolution/pixels
Dot pitch
Contrast ratios
Size
Aspect ratio
Monitor Types
Flat-panel monitors
Require less power to operate
Portable and thin
Most are backlit
Three types:
Liquid Crystal Display (LCD)
Older monitors
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
More advanced backlighting
Organic Light Emitting Diode (OLED)
Thin layer organic compound that produces light
Curved Monitors
Other monitors
Digital/interactive whiteboards
Connects to a computer or project
Controlled using a special pen or even your finger
Classrooms and corporate boardrooms
Digital Projector
Project the images from a traditional monitor onto a screen or wall
Printers
Color
Speed
Memory
Duplex printing
Type of Printers
NONIMPACT
PRINTER
IMPACT
PRINTER
Page 212
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2012 Edition Chapter 5
Comparison 31
Figure 5-35
Printers
Mobile Large-format
Plotters
printers printers
32
Non-Impact Printer
33
Non-Impact Printer
High-
speed
Color
35
Non-Impact Printer
1) Ink 2)Paper
36
Non-Impact Printer
37
Non-Impact Printer
Page 216 38
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2012 Edition Chapter 5
Figure 5-42
Impact Printer
Dot-matrix Daisy-wheel
Line printer
printer printer
39
Impact Printer
A dot-matrix printer produces
printed images when tiny wire
pins on a print head mechanism
strike an inked ribbon
much like the print mechanism
on a typewriter.
Page 217 40
Figure 5-43
Impact Printer
41
Impact Printer
42
Comparison Between Impact & Non-impact
Printers
IMPACT PRINTER NON-IMPACT PRINTER
Text or image is formed Text or image is formed
in contact of paper and without any physical
the printer head. contact of the paper and
the printer head.
Noisy, slow and poor Noiseless, fast and high
quality output. quality output.
These printers are These printers are
cheap. expensive.
Example – Dot matrix, Example – Laser , Ink-jet,
line, daisy wheel and thermal, photo, plotter and
etc. etc.
More..
43
Discovering Computers Fundamentals, 2012 Edition Chapter 5
Other Printers
44
Other Printers
3D Printers create 3-D shapes with a thin layer of material
repeatedly until created
3D printing or additive manufacturing is a process of making
three dimensional solid objects from a digital file.
In an additive process an object is created by laying down
successive layers of material until the object is created.
Each of these layers can be seen as a thinly sliced horizontal
cross-section of the eventual object.
Example
Objects
45
Tools for 3D Printer Processing
1. 3D scanners
3D scanners use different technologies to generate a 3D model (3D digital copy of object).
3D SCANNER 46
Other Printers
Cloud printers are printers connected to the Internet
that provide printing services to others on the
Internet. Google Cloud Print is a service that
supports cloud printing.
Other Printers
Braille printer
Audio and Video Devices
A data projector is a
device that projects the
text and images
displaying on a
computer or mobile
device screen on a
larger screen so that an
audience can see the
image clearly
50
Other Output Devices
Aninteractive
whiteboard is a touch-
sensitive device,
resembling a dry-erase
board, that displays the
image on a connected
computer screen
51
Combination of
Input and Output
Devices
Combination Input and Output Devices
Headsets
Combine a microphone and headphones
Virtual Reality
Created in 3D through computers for a virtual
experience
Headgear with gloves have sensors to collect data that
work with software
Input and Output Devices
for Physically Challenged Users
Head-mounted pointer Braille printer
56
A Look to the Future
Augmented Reality Displays